Rahul Gandhi, the new ‘Lingayat’ on the block

Rahul Gandhi, the new ‘Lingayat’ on the block

RAHUL Gandhi was a man on a mission on his two-day tour to Karnataka starting Tuesday. If one of his aims was to settle the tremors within the Congress over a grand Siddaramaiah birthday that left rivals – particularly D K Shivakumar – jittery, another crucial move was an outreach to the influential Lingayat community. On a visit to the Murgha Mutt, a prominent ashram in the Chitradurga region, Wednesday, Rahul took “initiation” into the Lingayat sect, which is considered a separate religion by its followers.
As part of the initiation, the senior Congress leader was given Ishtalinga, a symbol of ‘the universal force’, to wear. Tied to a thread that lies across the chest or body, Ishtalinga is usually put on children born in Lingayat families at the time of their naming ceremony, but can be tied at any time by persons who accept the Lingayat philosophy that revolves around a universal force, equality and secular values, say experts.
Following the ceremony, Rahul said: “It is an absolute honour to visit Sri Jagadguru Murugharajendra Vidyapeetha and receive the Ishtalinga deeksha from Dr Sri Shivamurthy Murugha Sharanaru.”
A website on the Lingayat sect calls the tying of the Ishtalinga “the main and important ritual for a Lingayat”. “Any human being irrespective of rich or poor, male or female, officer or clerk, director or office boy, black or white, can become a Lingayat by Ishtalinga deeksha.”
As per the website Lingayatreligion.com, the Lingayats are strict monotheists and enjoin the worship of only one God, namely, Linga (Shiva). The word ‘Linga’ here signifies “universal consciousness” qualified by “universal energy (shakti)”. Though Lingayats often refer to Shiva or Parashiva, for them he is not the mythological Shiva, but a formless God.

The practice of wearing the Ishtalinga was started by the 12th-century saint Basavanna, the founder of the Lingayat faith, as a rebellion against discrimination of women in the Upanayana or thread ceremony of Brahmins.
“We believe a member of any community can be a religious guru. Once a person becomes a part of the Lingayat faith, he can become a world guru of the community. Women have equal status as men among the Lingayats and they can be world gurus,” says Lingayat seer Dr Basavalinga Pattadevaru of the Hiremath Samsthana Bhalki ashram, which was established over five decades ago.
“While caste discrimination is central to the post-Manu Hinduism, Basavanna… and his associates… asked their followers not to observe it. They held that that once a man undergoes the initiation wherein he is given an Ishtalinga, he becomes superior and, therefore, all Lingayats must be treated as equal,” says a paper on Lingayatism authored by former chairman of the Department of Philosophy at Karnatak University Prof N G Mahadevappa.
While as per a Lingayat religion website, a follower is advised to do Ishtalinga puja daily, preferably early morning between 3 am and 5 am, there are no strict rules.

Dr Basavaraj Ballur, a scholar on the teachings of Basavanna, says that the significance of the Ishtalinga deeksha is not as much as it used to be. “Now anyone who wants it, can take it. For example when the Sharana (socio-religious) movement started, many people who were not born Lingayats, tied the linga. However merely tying the linga does not make a person a Lingayat. You can be a Lingayat even without tying the linga. If a human being follows the principles of Lingayatism, they are Lingayats, irrespective of their community,” Dr Ballur says.
Regretting that this was becoming sort of “a political gimmick”, Dr Ballur adds that while he has no issues with it, “… if you leave it at receiving the deeksha, it is not right. Once you receive the deeksha, then you must live according to the principles of Lingayatism.”
The Murugarajendra Mutt seer who gave Rahul the Ishtalinga deeksha is considered among the more liberal seers of the nearly 3,000 Lingayat mutts in Karnataka. Earlier this year, the seer had supported a Congress Walk for Water organised by party president D K Shivakumar for implementation of the Mekedatu drinking water project in south Karnataka.
However, many Lingayat mutts identify themselves closely with Hindu religious practices and are considered to be staunch supporters of the BJP, which the Lingayat community has backed in recent years. Making up nearly 17% of the state population, or the single-largest community in Karnataka, their support is crucial for any party in coming to power in Karnataka.

The BJP linked Rahul’s visit and Lingayat initiation to this. “Election Hindu” getting ready for the 2023 Karnataka Assembly Elections,” its social media handle put out, soon after the visit.
The ‘Election Hindu’ reference was to the BJP’s contention that Rahul reinforces his religious credentials only around elections, whether visiting temples, calling himself a “Shiva devotee”, or the party identifying him as a “janeyudhari Brahmin”.
Shivakumar, a leader of the Vokkaliga community, which is considered the main competitor to the Lingayats when it comes to political influence, countered the criticism. “Whatever the religion, the principles are the same. Prayer to many gods is prayer to one God. There may be many rituals, but devotion is the same. Rahul Gandhi insisted on visiting the Mutt to understand the services rendered by the Mutt. In the past, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi have held the Mutt in high regard. He (Rahul) has not come to seek political help but to appreciate the work that is being done,” Shivakumar said.
In 2013-2018, in a bid to woo the Lingayat community away from the BJP, the Congress had backed a demand from the more liberal section for recognition of Lingayatism as a religion separate from Hinduism. The move had backfired and had led to a large section of the Veerashaiva Lingayats — who are dominant in the community – to rally behind the BJP in the 2018 Assembly polls.
Now, the Congress thinks it has a fresh chance, with the BJP seen as having dumped its biggest Lingayat leader, B S Yediyurappa.
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‘Santhal ka CM’ Pankaj Mishra: The all-powerful aide of Hemant Soren now under arrest

‘Santhal ka CM’ Pankaj Mishra: The all-powerful aide of Hemant Soren now under arrest

IT seemed like a minor incident at the time. On June 22, 2020, businessman Sambhu Nandan Kumar filed a complaint against Pankaj Mishra, an aide of Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren, accusing him of assault over the auction of a toll tax gate. Two years later, the Enforcement Directorate would begin an investigation against Mishra starting from this case, summoning Kumar as witness and impounding his phone as it contained recordings of the threat.
Now, the man once called ‘Santhal ka CM’ for being the most powerful man in the Santhal Parganas area, to which CM Soren belongs, finds himself behind bars, accused of illegally operating stone-crushers, and facing questions over 37 bank accounts containing Rs 11.88 crore in cash alone.
“No one ever thought that a powerful person like him would take a fall like this,” says an insider of Soren’s Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), from Sahibganj district in which the CM’s constituency Barhait falls. “He was responsible for the election management of Hemant Soren. They were very close.”
In a sign perhaps of the change in Mishra’s fortunes, there has been no official reaction from the JMM to the charges against him. Soren, himself facing questions over the issue of mining leases, would not want the shadow of any other controversy as the poll countdown begins.
A native of Sakrogarh area of Sahibganj, with roots in Bihar, Mishra cut his teeth under the tutelage of Simon Marandi, one of the JMM’s founders whose politics revolved around Sahibganj and Pakur districts.
According to another insider, Mishra was the quintessential partyman, content being in the background, handling the “dirty work”, with no aspirations for electoral politics. “This was why Hemant trusted him completely, because of his lack of ambition. This is also how he remained close to both Shibu Soren and Hemant.”
That doesn’t mean proximity to power didn’t change him, say others, particularly after Soren became the CM in 2019 at the head of a JMM-Congress-RJD coalition government.
A source in the Chief Minister’s Office talked about a lasting image from the very first Cabinet meeting of the government. “Mishra walked behind CM Soren, his shirt collar up, two buttons open. Someone objected to this, and he became extremely angry.”
Over the past three years, Mishra is believed to have got close to many business owners in Sahibganj area, where stone chips are mined. Word on the street soon was that Mishra’s word counted on who could be in the business of stone and sand mining and its transportation to neighbouring states, and that rules could be “bent”.
As per sources, business owners in the field realised not to go against him in their own best interests.
On May 3 last year, a police officer in Sahibganj district, Rupa Tirkey, investigating a case against Mishra, died allegedly by suicide. Tirkey’s death is now being probed by the CBI, after the BJP took up the matter and her family approached the Jharkhand High Court.
Rajesh Agrawal, the Secretary of the Eastern Jharkhand Chamber of Commerce and Industries, based in Sahibganj, says: “We never came across any such complaints from any business owners. But we are aghast to know the amount of illegal mining that was happening, now that the ED has conducted raids and seized cash vis-a-vis Mishra’s arrest.”
On Tuesday, the ED said in a release that they had seized an inland vessel as part of the ongoing investigation, which was allegedly being operated without permit from Sukargarh Ghat in Sahebganj. The ED said Rajesh Yadav alis Dahu Yadav operated it in “collusion” with Mishra and others, for transporting mined stone chips or stone boulders.
The ED put the estimated cost of the vessel at Rs 30 crore, taking the total proceeds of this alleged scam to past the Rs 100 crore mark.
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Quad’s mutual cooperation is achieving a free and open Indo-Pacific region: PM Modi in Tokyo

Quad’s mutual cooperation is achieving a free and open Indo-Pacific region: PM Modi in Tokyo

Prime Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday attended the second in-person meeting of Quad leaders in Tokyo, where he said that the Quad has gained a significant place on the world stage in a short span of time. He said that Quad’s mutual cooperation is achieving a free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific region.

My remarks at the Quad Leaders Meeting in Tokyo. https://t.co/WzN5lC8J4v
— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) May 24, 2022
The Prime Minister spoke of India’s contributions to ensuring stability in the Indo-Pacific region. Earlier in the day, India had joined the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF), an Indo-Pacific economic bloc led by the US to counter China.
“Despite the adverse situation of Covid-19, we’ve increased our coordination for vaccine delivery, climate action, supply chain resilience, disaster response, economic cooperation and other areas. It has ensured peace, prosperity and stability in Indo-Pacific,” PM Modi said at the summit.
He also referred to the Quad’s commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific. “Our mutual cooperation is encouraging achieving a free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific Region,” he said.
PM Modi was welcomed by US President Joe Biden, among other world leaders. It’s wonderful to see you again in person, Biden told Modi.
The Quad summit is being attended by US President Joe Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Australia’s newly-elected Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
(With inputs from PTI)

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